En 1980, la banda de new wave Devo logró un éxito con "Whip It" y alcanzó reconocimiento popular con su mensaje de "des-evolución" social, formado en respuesta a los tiroteos de Kent State d... Leer todoEn 1980, la banda de new wave Devo logró un éxito con "Whip It" y alcanzó reconocimiento popular con su mensaje de "des-evolución" social, formado en respuesta a los tiroteos de Kent State de 1970.En 1980, la banda de new wave Devo logró un éxito con "Whip It" y alcanzó reconocimiento popular con su mensaje de "des-evolución" social, formado en respuesta a los tiroteos de Kent State de 1970.
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 1 nominación en total
- Self - Devo
- (as Jerry Casale)
- Self - Devo
- (as Bob Mothersbaugh)
- Self - Devo
- (material de archivo)
- (voz)
- Self - Devo
- (material de archivo)
- Self - Devo
- (material de archivo)
- (voz)
- Self - Devo's Manager
- (material de archivo)
- Self - 35th President of the United States
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- Self - 37th President of the United States
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- Self - 39th President of the United States
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- Self - 40th President of the United States
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- Self - Killed at Kent State Anti-War Protest
- (material de archivo)
- Self - Killed at Kent State Anti-War Protest
- (material de archivo)
- Self - Early Collaborator
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- (voz)
- Self - Christian Evangelist
- (material de archivo)
- Self - Singer-Songwriter
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- Self - Entrepreneur
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Opiniones destacadas
Devo's catalog is rich and tuneful, despite the surface weirdness. The band wasn't just keenly talented musically, they brought a wit and an intellectual heft that was sorely needed in the music industry.
Casale seems to be the genius behind it all with Mothersbaugh right up there. But it's Casale's and Motherbaugh's never-ending complaining about the commercialization of the music industry and how Devo were poor, innocent lambs, victims of not just the piranha-like music industry but of America itself that disappointed me.
It's obvious Devo were masters at commercializing their product, even placing marketing/product paraphernalia inside albums. Instead of being the victims of commercialization, Devo were experts at sucking out the money from everything they touched/touch.
Funny that they whine so much while both Casale and Mothersbaugh continue to become richer and richer in the film industry while the legend of Devo continues to grow.
A fine documentary, as enjoyable as the band, but Devo sometimes come across today as too 21st century, too privileged and entitled with wealth, reminding one of Trump or Musk, playing the victim while enriching themselves.
"DEVO" charts the surreal saga in characteristic fashion: colorful and over the top in its barrage of visuals comprising interviews with the band members (an impressively articulate Gerald Casale stands out) as they go toe to toe with snippets of live footage and a varied array of films and images from vintage reels to historical snapshots. The result is a cornucopia of sight and sound and great music.
For a band as fun and as eccentric the documentary strangely moves at a conventional and sedate pace at the first half. A lack of perspective ensues with a failure to give emphasis on the band's impact and influence on music and the entertainment industry as a whole. Also, the band members' careers after the band's heyday are given short mention which is a shame considering Mark Mothersbaugh and Gerald Casale pursued eclectic and quite interesting artistic endeavors. This is a doc that could have been another hour long.
Whether looking like aliens in janitor's uniforms or a bunch of nerdy autists in early 20th-Century swimwear, all topped by those memorable saucer-shaped hats, Devo, all robotically-synchronized stage movements and mainstream infiltration-subversion, and again, great music (re-listening to their songs I was struck how fresh and much better they sounded) left a distinct and enduring mark. A fine tribute to a brilliant band, this is one fans and Rock enthusiasts should see.
I was unaware they were actually highly intelligent people trying to give a message politically to us all!!
So many people who were influenced by them and inspired by their music being it controversial mongoloid etc. Didn't know David Bowie had anything to do with them either.
I thought so many of their songs were great and real catchy and still get a buzz out of hearing them. Also now know why MTV do not play their music (didn't in the 80's) and haven't seen them since so that goes to show Sadly 2 of the four have died at a fairly youngish age but the 2 telling the story are fascinating to listen you.
The Reality is "Devo" was a Cleveland Based Band Formed as a Secondary, but Necessary, Outlet for the Bands Art-Fetish Exporting Biting, Cutting Edge "Social-Satire" through Succinct Visual Images Cut & Pasted from Pop-Culture, Corporate Domination, and the Expressive Landscape that Dominates, Over-Looks, and Controls the Masses through Multi-Media.
That Subverts Free-Thinking and Mesmerizes Everyone by "Manufacturing Consent". A Subconscious Capitulation to Things that May Not Be in Their Best-Interest.
At an Impressionable Time and Space-Place of the Band-Members, a Tragedy Struck on the Campus of Kent State University where Some of Them Witnessed First Hand...the National Guard was Deployed to Maintain Order on "Protestors", THEN...
The Guard Open-Fired and "4 Are Dead in Ohio" and Over a Hundred Injured.
Mark Mothersbaugh Sites this Horror as the Catalyst for Him and the Others to Not Be "Couch-Potatoes" No More. So They Shunned the Spud and "Devo" was Born.
Difficult to Describe other than Surreal, Bizarre, and Unique..."Devo" and its Art-Form of Music and Sound Combined with a Provocative, Stimulating, and Vibrant Aesthetic...A Thing most People Don't Get. Never Will. In the Long-Run what Penetrated was an Ultra-Simplistic-Diddy Called "Whip It"...
that was a Far-Cry from Their Usually Dense and Deep Lyrical and Musical Postulation on the Problems of a "Devolving" Species. An Anti-Darwinian Exclamation of a Reversal of the Theory of Continual "Progress" of a Life-Form for Survival.
Everything about "Devo" is a Complicated Cornucopia...a Primal-Scream of Pain from Human-Being Confronted with an Obvious but Ignored Decline of Everything and Anything About Life as Living in 20th Century America.
"It's a Beautiful World", They Sung..."For You, For You...Not Me".
The Band's Legacy will Stand the Test of Time, if there is any. Because it is Nothing Less than...
THE TRUTH
A Must See Documentary of the Band who Documented with Music and Images the Glaring "Rot" in America and Dared to Ask the Question...
"Are We Not Men?"
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaDevo (via Mark Mothersbaugh) earns approximately $1 million annually from "Uncontrollable Urge," thanks to its long-standing role as the theme for MTV's "Ridiculousness."
- Citas
Mark Mothersbaugh: And after the set was over, Bowie came backstage, and he said he'd like to produce us. We're like, "Sounds good to us, because we're sleeping in an Econoline van tonight."
- ConexionesFeatures Island of Lost Souls (1932)
- Bandas sonoras(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
Performed by Devo
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 34min(94 min)
- Color